English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

HELP!My 6yr old daschund
(not neutered)marked the
cat litter box.The female
cat is friendly and slowly
adjusting.My dog is having
a hard time.He wants to chase
of course and I correct it.
He is getting better at not
doing that.But,now he is
marking his territory.
What can I do to stop
this or prevent this
behavior?Will neutering
help this?Any suggestions.

2006-08-07 12:20:37 · 5 answers · asked by lostgrandma1967 2 in Pets Dogs

5 answers

Squirt water at your dog with a spray bottle while he is doing the act. Only squirt him while is in the act so he will understand what he is doing is not acceptable. If you squirt him after the fact he will not understand why he is getting squirted with water

2006-08-07 12:29:22 · answer #1 · answered by kiu 3 · 0 0

My rescues mark. I handiest rescue puppies, considering the fact that my feminine is not fond of alternative women being in her dwelling. With each puppy I have rescued, I have had a challenge with marking. After neutering, that challenge died all the way down to a trainable degree. I feel neutering offers you the upperhand in preventing the marking- even though it's not unimaginable to educate an unaltered puppy not to mark. However, if the puppy is raised from a domestic dog and taught to not mark from the commencing, it makes the task plenty simpler. Callmedaisy- "All my my puppies compete in agility/Frisbee/dock diving/rally/and many others and you'll be able to be disqualified for having your male "pop" his leg and pee whilst walking a rough or within the center of a contest." What venues are you competing with? I have under no circumstances heard of a puppy for urinating throughout agility, frisbee, or dock diving. Rally, probably, however the different exercises have laws pointing out the clock will likely be stopped for a puppy to get rid of, then restarted as soon as the puppy has completed. EDIT: Ah, might be I am taking into consideration disc then!

2016-08-28 11:13:13 · answer #2 · answered by pharisien 4 · 0 0

Does the dog stay primarily indoors? Mine stay out most of the time and we have an understanding - I don't pee in their yard and they don't pee in my house - we all have our own space. The basic rule is that house-broken dogs know that their bathroom is outdoors. At six years of age, it sounds like one final act of defiance before he enters into his golden years ( like when dad divorces mom and runs off with the baby sitter). Anyway, all I can add is that you need to step up, be the boss, and let the pooch know where is an acceptible place - a little patch of paradise that he can call his own.

2006-08-07 16:47:44 · answer #3 · answered by Okie 4 · 0 0

In front of your dog hit the floor (with a newspaper) of the place he should not mark, then take your dog to the place he can pee and hit that place too.
Repeat the procedure three times at the very moment you detect he is marking his territory.
Hope this works,

2006-08-07 12:43:14 · answer #4 · answered by mfacio 3 · 0 0

Pee on your dog, HE is YOUR territory..then tell him, YOUR MINE, now stop pisssing around, and just simply smack him in the head lightly and say "NO!" everytime he goes after the cat, I could say alot more but if you want, just email me at haystack_balla510@yahoo.com , im sure i could help you out alot more, im just letting you know some quick things..GOOD LUCK!

2006-08-07 12:26:06 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers